When Lightship 116 was completed in 1930, she was among the most modern and capable lightships in use with the US Lighthouse Service (USLHS). One of the 6 vessels of the Lightship-100 class of lightships, she was built to USLHS design, number 116 and boasted the best in stability, signaling capacity, living accommodations, and engineering efficiency available in 1929-1930 era. The other five (5) sister-ships of the class were LS#'s 100, 113, 114, 115 and 117. See the pull-down menu for the LS-100 Class Ships page with information on each one.

GENERAL:

Lightship 116 was built in South Carolina at the Charleston Machine and Drydock Company at a cost of $274,424. She was launched on 22 October 1929 and completed on 14 August 1930. The new vessel featured an efficient diesel-electric propulsion plant (superseding earlier steam powered designs), all-steel construction although still riveted, and impressive signaling equipment capable of marking her station in all kinds of weather and light conditions. Electricity for the ship's 350 hp propulsion motor was supplied by four 75-kilowatt diesel engine/generator units located in the engine room.Electricity for ships lighting and machinery was produced by two ships-service diesel generators.

This floating lighthouse had a signaling apparatus consisting of a 13,000 candlepower electric beacon lamp atop each mast (later consolidated on the aft mast), an electric foghorn (later replaced with a compressed-air diaphone), a HF direction finding radio beacon, and fog bell mounted on the main deck. When RADAR was installed in the 116/538, the two Light Beacons were replaced with one double light fixture on the Aft Mast.The main light beacon used a 1500 watt bulb that produced 35,000 candlepower and the stand-by light beacon used a 1000 watt bulb and produced 13,000 candlepower.The ship was equipped with two 5,000-pound mushroom anchors (one main and a spare) designed to hold her on station in all but the roughest weather. On two occasions (1936 and 1962) while marking the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay, Lightship 116-538 rode out hurricanes so powerful that the ship's anchor chain broke, forcing the crew to drop the spare anchor and run full ahead into the wind for many hours in vain attempts to remain on station.

CREW:

As shown in the original plans from 1930, Lightship 116 was initially designed for a crew of up to 17. The crew accommodations included 5 two-man staterooms for the unlicensed sailors, a crew's mess, and an electrically powered galley and refrigerator unit (a major advancement for 1930). The Officers (Mate, Engineer, 1st Assistant and 2nd Assistant Engineers) had their own staterooms adjacent to their mess (Wardroom) and the Captain, or Master as he was called in the Lighthouse Service years, occupied his own stateroom immediately behind the pilothouse.The two Radio Officers had their bunks in the Radio Room in the aft deck house.

With the transfer of the Lighthouse Service to the Coast Guard in 1939, Commanding Officers of Lightships were designated to be a USCG Warrant Officer Bos?n.The remainder of the lightships? crew was Coast Guard enlisted personnel. This transition was initially very slow and it took the beginning of the war with Japan in December 1941 for all civilians aboard lights to be immediately converted to the coast guard ranks or forced to resign. As radios became easier to operate, the two Radio Officer positions were eventually removed, along with their 2 bunks in the radio room. Then an extra stateroom was added to the starboard work areafor the ships cook. This changed the full crew to a total of 16 sailors. During normal operating periods several members of the crew would be away on shore leave at any given time. Lightship duty was designated as "extremely arduous sea duty", so lightship sailors earned extra leave. With the coast guard sending a cutter out every two weeks to bring supplies, fresh food, water, fuel, repair parts and mail, it provided the perfect transport to allow crew to use two weeks of their extra leave.

ASSIGNMENTS.

The US Lighthouse Service first assigned Lightship 116 to the Fenwick Island Shoal Light Station off the Delaware coast from 1930-33 where she was marked "FENWICK". In 1933, she was assigned to the entrance to Chesapeake Bay and marked "CHESAPEAKE" until the beginning of World War II. During that war, most coastal lightships were withdrawn for security reasons although some stations did have a buoy placed in that location, and many Lightships were modified and reassigned for wartime duties. During late 1942 Lightship 116 was sent to the Boston Navy Yard, decommissioned for repairs and modifications, including being painted battleship gray. Recommissioned in January 1943, Lightship 116 was used as a patrol, inspection, examination and guard vessel at the north entrance of the Cape Cod Canal, stationed at Sandwich Mass. In late 1945, Lightship 116 returned to the Chesapeake Light Station and the waters 17 miles off Cape Henry (VA) where her piercing fog horn, steady light beacon, powerful radio direction finding beacon and bright red hull stood watch and guided maritime traffic safely in and out of the Chesapeake Bay for the next 20 years.

THE END OF SERVICE WITH THE US COAST GUARD.

Despite some equipment upgrades such as radar, technology began to overtake Lightship 116/538 by the 1960s. In September 1965, the Chesapeake Lightship Station was replaced by a Coast Guard offshore light tower built on stout pilings strong enough to withstand the roughest seas. Manned by a crew of just four, the "Texas" style light tower was cheaper to run and had a more powerful beacon visible for a distance of 17 miles. After being relieved at the Chesapeake station, the final duty station for Lightship 116/538 was guiding shipping in and out of the Delaware Bay.She was then marked "DELAWARE" until replaced on that light station by a large automated light buoy in late 1970 and was placed out of service at that time. The lightship 116/538 was officiallydecommissioned on the 6th of January 1971.

LIFE AFTER THE COAST GUARD.

In late 1971, Lightship 116/538 was acquired by the National Park Service and was berthed on the Potomac River where it was open to the public. The Park Service also operated the Lightship, getting it underway periodically and conducting basic oceanography and seamanship training for students until 1982. Since 1982, the ship has been on loan to the City of Baltimore, who in turn has entrusted it to the then BaltimoreMaritimeMuseum, now the Historic Ships In Baltimore museum, to maintain as a historic museum ship.She continues to serve as an important link with the history of the U.S. Lighthouse Service and Coast Guard Aids to Navigation in the United States. In 1989 Lightship 116/538 "Chesapeake", was designated a National Historic Landmark.

The lightship 116/538 is moored at Pier 3 in Baltimore?s InnerHarbor, adjacent to the ex-Navy Submarine Torsk and the aquarium.She still displays the light station name CHESAPEAKE, since she spent most of her operational career on that station. The volunteers who work to maintain and repair the Lightship hope to see her restored to the exact configuration that the ship was in on the 25th of September 1965, the day she departed the Chesapeake Light station for the last time.